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Grandview Heights council debates right-of-way plantings, height limits and enforcement ahead of April vote
Summary
At a work session, Grandview Heights council members and staff reviewed Ordinance 2026-07 to amend yard-care rules, discussing a 10-inch grass cap, possible allowances for flowers and pollinator plantings, a 3-foot proposal for right-of-way plantings, permit options and enforcement procedures; no vote was taken.
The Grandview Heights City Council held a work session to discuss Ordinance 2026-07, a proposed update to the city’s yard-care and property-maintenance code that would renumber §5,211 and add rules on managed natural landscapes, rights-of-way plantings, height limits and enforcement. The sponsor, Mayor Kearns, and city staff reviewed packet materials and public feedback; no votes were taken during the session.
Why it matters: The ordinance seeks to balance resident plantings and pollinator-friendly landscaping with safety, access and public-works needs in city-owned rights of way. Councilmembers and staff debated how to write enforceable standards that preserve emergency access, sight lines and address visibility while allowing some plantings that support biodiversity.
Staff reported the city documented 29 complaints last year relating to plantings in the right of way, with roughly 25–27 unique properties, and provided those records to council for review. "We we identified 29 complaints that were filed relating to, plantings," a staff member said during the meeting.
Council discussion focused on three practical areas: the…
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